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Aerodynamic Design Study of Advanced Multistage Axial CompressorAs a direct response to the need for further performance gains from current multistage axial compressors, an investigation of advanced aerodynamic design concepts that will lead to compact, high-efficiency, and wide-operability configurations is being pursued. Part I of this report describes the projected level of technical advancement relative to the state of the art and quantifies it in terms of basic aerodynamic technology elements of current design systems. A rational enhancement of these elements is shown to lead to a substantial expansion of the design and operability space. Aerodynamic design considerations for a four-stage core compressor intended to serve as a vehicle to develop, integrate, and demonstrate aerotechnology advancements are discussed. This design is biased toward high efficiency at high loading. Three-dimensional blading and spanwise tailoring of vector diagrams guided by computational fluid dynamics (CFD) are used to manage the aerodynamics of the high-loaded endwall regions. Certain deleterious flow features, such as leakage-vortex-dominated endwall flow and strong shock-boundary-layer interactions, were identified and targeted for improvement. However, the preliminary results were encouraging and the front two stages were extracted for further aerodynamic trimming using a three-dimensional inverse design method described in part II of this report. The benefits of the inverse design method are illustrated by developing an appropriate pressure-loading strategy for transonic blading and applying it to reblade the rotors in the front two stages of the four-stage configuration. Multistage CFD simulations based on the average passage formulation indicated an overall efficiency potential far exceeding current practice for the front two stages. Results of the CFD simulation at the aerodynamic design point are interrogated to identify areas requiring additional development. In spite of the significantly higher aerodynamic loadings, advanced CFD-based tools were able to effectively guide the design of a very efficient axial compressor under state-of-the-art aeromechanical constraints.
Document ID
20030014624
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Technical Publication (TP)
Authors
Larosiliere, Louis M.
(Army Research Lab. Cleveland, OH United States)
Wood, Jerry R.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Hathaway, Michael D.
(Army Research Lab. Cleveland, OH United States)
Medd, Adam J.
(Syracuse Univ. NY United States)
Dang, Thong Q.
(Syracuse Univ. NY United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 2002
Subject Category
Aircraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
E-13352
ARL-TR-2859
NAS 1.60:211568
NASA/TP-2002-211568
Report Number: E-13352
Report Number: ARL-TR-2859
Report Number: NAS 1.60:211568
Report Number: NASA/TP-2002-211568
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 714-03-27
PROJECT: DA Proj. 1L1-61102-AF-20
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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